Joined May 2011
L8: Grand Teacher
Forum Thread
https://www.healthcare.gov/ Now OPEN - Cheap insurance
September 30, 2013 at
09:13 PM
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Finance
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https://www.healthcare. gov/ Now OPEN - Cheap insurance
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If he makes over ~$3800 per year his parents generally wouldn't claim him. There are situations where you can if you provide "more than half the person's support" though.
If he makes over ~$3800 per year his parents generally wouldn't claim him. There are situations where you can if you provide "more than half the person's support" though.
That was 20 years ago, and now you're trying to justify being part of what you perceive as "the problem"? Whatever.
So it means he and his parent would be filing separate tax returns. Not sure why he would be combining his income with his parent's income to determine if he qualifies.
Obamacare, and it's Medicaid expansion, would have HELPED you.
Don't you get it?
They look at how much his parents receive and use that to calculate his eligibility.
Obamacare, and it's Medicaid expansion, would have HELPED you.
Don't you get it?
I'm not sure the rule....but even if they file separate tax returns, they determine it by Household income.
They look at how much his parents receive and use that to calculate his eligibility.
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Anyway, he lives in PA. PA opted into medicaid expansion but apparently in the last 2 weeks decided to institute some weird reforms that aren't completely clear. He qualifies for medicaid, but he'll have to deal with Tom Corbett's entitlement angst, however that manifests itself.
I'm not sure the rule....but even if they file separate tax returns, they determine it by Household income.
They look at how much his parents receive and use that to calculate his eligibility.
For many people who are younger than 35 and living in cities, it's quite common to have roommates.
You don't really report your roommates income as your household income. It would be rude to ask all my roommates about how much they make.
Oh I can answer that one. Because back then you were probably in your 20s and now you are probably closer to 40 than 30. That means you are at risk for more disease and health problems. That past is the past. At your age, risk of hypertension goes up, cholesterol, all of those type of issues.
Heart disease becomes a concern, for example. Not much of concern at 25.
Either way when i was literally about to die and puking up my guts. We went into the ER 10 hours later and after an immediate CT scan they gave me 2 hours to live due to an inflamed appendix (Appendicitis) that is on the verge of rupturing. I had that sucker yanked out right away and went on to complete college at Mizzou with 2 degrees working at a Fortune Top 50 investment bank with an awesome insurance policy (apparently I earned the right to insurance which I had a long farking time ago in Canada as a kid).
I would not want anyone who does not have access to medical treatment to experience the pain of an inflamed appendix. I would not want anyone's appendix to burst I don't care how much you abuse the system or ask for freebies / handouts. There is a human thing to do and a ruthless thing to do. What you are saying is flat out ruthless that "everyone doesn't have a right to healthcare" . My family would technically have no right to insurance when I was in high school and with your thinking I would have never made it to first day of college. Now how the fark am I suppose to try and be a contributing member of society if I can't even get my appendix look at since my family did not earn the right to insurance
For many people who are younger than 35 and living in cities, it's quite common to have roommates.
You don't really report your roommates income as your household income. It would be rude to ask all my roommates about how much they make.
Anyways, I think Nautii is right that he may qualify for Medicaid, but it depends what the governor and legislature there decide to do.
They should let me decide how much of my tax money should go to my health insurance and how much of it should go the the bloated "national defense" fund. I would probably spend most of it on my health insurance rather than "national defense" and homeland security/TSA/NSA.
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